Radiation therapy-induced normal tissue damage: involvement of EMT pathways and role of FLASH-RT in reducing toxicities.

IF 1.5 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIOLOGY
Dhasarathdev Srinivasan, Rajasekaran Subbarayan, Madhan Krishnan, Ranjith Balakrishna, Pooja Adtani, Rupendra Shrestha, Ankush Chauhan, Shyamaladevi Babu, Arunkumar Radhakrishnan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Radiation therapy (RT) is fundamental to the fight against cancer because of its exceptional ability to target and destroy cancer cells. However, conventional radiation therapy can significantly affect the adjacent normal tissues, leading to fibrosis, inflammation, and decreased organ function. This tissue damage not only reduces the quality of life but also prevents the total elimination of cancer. The transformation of epithelial cells into mesenchymal-like cells, termed epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), is essential for processes such as fibrosis, embryogenesis, and wound healing. Conventional radiation therapy increases the asymmetric activation of fibrotic and inflammatory pathways, and the resulting chronic fibrotic changes and organ dysfunction are linked to radiation-induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Recent advances in radiation therapy, namely flash radiation therapy (FLASH-RT), have the potential to widen the therapeutic index. Radiation delivered by FLASH-RT at very high dose rates (exceeding 40 Gy/s) can protect normal tissue from radiation-induced damage, a phenomenon referred to as the "FLASH effect". Preclinical studies have demonstrated that FLASH-RT successfully inhibits processes associated with fibrosis and epithelial-mesenchymal transition, mitigates damage to normal tissue, and enhances regeneration. Three distinct types of EMT have been identified: type-1, associated with embryogenesis; Type-2, associated with injury potential; and type-3, related with cancer spread. The regulation of EMT via pathways, including TGF-β/SMAD, WNT/β-catenin, and NF-κB, is essential for radiation-induced tissue remodelling. This study examined radiation-induced EMT, TGF-β activity, multiple signalling pathways in fibrosis, and the potential of FLASH-RT to reduce tissue damage. FLASH-RT is a novel approach to treat chronic tissue injury and fibrosis post-irradiation by maintaining epithelial properties and regulating mesenchymal markers including vimentin and N-cadherin. Understanding these pathways will facilitate the development of future therapies that can alleviate fibrosis, improve the efficacy of cancer therapy, and improve the quality of life of patients.

放射治疗诱导的正常组织损伤:EMT通路的参与和FLASH-RT在减少毒性中的作用。
放射治疗(RT)是对抗癌症的基础,因为它具有特殊的靶向和摧毁癌细胞的能力。然而,传统的放射治疗可显著影响邻近的正常组织,导致纤维化、炎症和器官功能下降。这种组织损伤不仅降低了生活质量,而且阻碍了癌症的完全消除。上皮细胞向间充质样细胞的转化,被称为上皮-间充质转化(epithelial-mesenchymal transition, EMT),对于纤维化、胚胎发生和伤口愈合等过程至关重要。常规放射治疗增加了纤维化和炎症通路的不对称激活,由此导致的慢性纤维化改变和器官功能障碍与辐射诱导的上皮-间质转化有关。放射治疗的最新进展,即闪光放射治疗(flash - rt),有可能扩大治疗指数。FLASH- rt以非常高的剂量率(超过40 Gy/s)释放的辐射可以保护正常组织免受辐射引起的损伤,这种现象被称为“FLASH效应”。临床前研究表明,FLASH-RT成功地抑制了与纤维化和上皮间质转化相关的过程,减轻了对正常组织的损伤,并增强了再生。已经确定了三种不同类型的EMT: 1型,与胚胎发生有关;2型,与损伤潜力有关;3型,与癌症扩散有关。通过TGF-β/SMAD、WNT/β-catenin和NF-κB等途径调控EMT对辐射诱导的组织重构至关重要。本研究检测了辐射诱导的EMT、TGF-β活性、纤维化中的多种信号通路,以及FLASH-RT减少组织损伤的潜力。FLASH-RT是一种通过维持上皮性质和调节包括vimentin和N-cadherin在内的间充质标志物来治疗辐照后慢性组织损伤和纤维化的新方法。了解这些途径将促进未来治疗方法的发展,这些治疗方法可以减轻纤维化,提高癌症治疗的疗效,并改善患者的生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.90%
发文量
53
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: This journal is devoted to fundamental and applied issues in radiation research and biophysics. The topics may include: Biophysics of ionizing radiation: radiation physics and chemistry, radiation dosimetry, radiobiology, radioecology, biophysical foundations of medical applications of radiation, and radiation protection. Biological effects of radiation: experimental or theoretical work on molecular or cellular effects; relevance of biological effects for risk assessment; biological effects of medical applications of radiation; relevance of radiation for biosphere and in space; modelling of ecosystems; modelling of transport processes of substances in biotic systems. Risk assessment: epidemiological studies of cancer and non-cancer effects; quantification of risk including exposures to radiation and confounding factors Contributions to these topics may include theoretical-mathematical and experimental material, as well as description of new techniques relevant for the study of these issues. They can range from complex radiobiological phenomena to issues in health physics and environmental protection.
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